US Senate defeats effort to limit US aid to Ukraine
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Assistance to Ukraine receives broad bipartisan support in the US Congress.
PHOTO: AFP
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WASHINGTON – The US Senate voted overwhelmingly on Thursday against an effort to tie military aid to Ukraine to Nato members’ defence spending, despite 13 Republicans backing the bid from Republican Senator Mike Lee to restrict US aid to Ukraine.
The 100-member Senate opposed the amendment to the National Defence Authorisation Act, or NDAA, by 71 to 13.
The amendment would have required that only 2 per cent of the funds made available for Ukraine by the Department of Defence during fiscal year 2024 be obligated or expended until all members of the Nato alliance spend at least 2 per cent of their gross domestic product (GDP) on defence.
The United States has sent more than US$40 billion (S$53 billion) in military aid to Ukraine since Russia invaded in February 2022, including US$1.3 billion that President Joe Biden’s administration announced on Wednesday.
The assistance to Ukraine receives broad bipartisan support in the US Congress, which has control of government spending. But a small group of Republicans – many with close ties to former president and current presidential candidate Donald Trump – has questioned that aid.
Republicans in the House of Representatives offered amendments to cut Ukraine aid when the Republican-led chamber considered its version of the NDAA last week. Those amendments were also defeated.
As he campaigned to be the Republican presidential nominee in 2024, Trump said he would ask Europe to reimburse the United States for the cost of restoring stockpiles of weapons that have been sent to Ukraine.
He had said previously he would withdraw the US from Nato if all 31 members do not spend 2 per cent of their GDP on defence. REUTERS

